In Search of Hope
Inspired by early Quaker Margaret Fell, this book uses stories and practical exercises to help and encourage us all to find hope in difficult times
Inspired by early Quaker Margaret Fell, this book uses stories and practical exercises to help and encourage us all to find hope in difficult times
Inspired by early Quaker Margaret Fell, this book uses stories and practical exercises to help and encourage us all to find hope in difficult times
Quaker, Spiritual growth, Theology
In Search of Hope delves into our lived experience today to discover the fleeting moments of hope available to us and offers stories, as well as easy practical exercises, to give us paths into the self so that we might create a personal landscape in which hope can flourish. Inspired by the writings of one of the founders of Quakerism in the seventeenth century, Margaret Fell, In Search of Hope is an attempt to bring some of the first ideas of Quakerism into our lives in these challenging times.
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In Search of Hope is a vibrant, practical book, which draws on the deep roots of the Quaker tradition to provide immediate and useful spiritual help. Through story, example, personal reflection and history the reader is guided on an exploration of the living hope which was experienced by Margaret Fell and which we can experience today. ~ Rhiannon Grant, Deputy Programme Leader, Centre for Research in Quaker Studies, Woodbrooke, Birmingham, UK, Honorary Senior Lecturer, University of Birmingham
In Search of Hope is a packet of seeds. As you read you are gently encouraged to plant these seeds in your own soul and you never know what will germinate and blossom. When you re-read you find that the stories stay the same but the exercises change each time, because your responses grow into something new and often unexpected. Don't try to skim-read this book and don't read it in one gulp. It's far too rich and will give you spiritual indigestion. It will hopefully become a favourite gift, which gives the reader a sense of true communication with other seeking souls. ~ Frances Sutherland, Resident Quaker, Muswell Hill Meeting, North-West London Area Meeting
Joanna Godfrey Wood offers a highly readable exploration of what it means to live an actively hopeful life. By cultivating "witnessing", a special kind of attentiveness to the apparent ordinariness of everyday life, hope can be found as an energising power in the present. This is a practical book grounded in both the wisdom of early Quaker Margaret Fell and stories of contemporary life. Readers searching for spiritual sustenance and revival in a difficult world will find much to enjoy and draw on here. ~ Mark Russ, author of Quaker Shaped Christianity
This little book offers really helpful resources to anyone searching for hope in these turbulent times. Drawing on her own experience, Joanna Godfrey Wood expertly weaves together stories, personal reflections, and simple practices that help us to keep focused on a light that shines in the darkness. This is needed now more than ever. ~ Stuart Masters, Programme Coordinator (History and Theology), Woodbrooke, UK
“Perhaps hope is a continuing ‘forward propulsion’, found in the unexpected.” I took this part-sentence as a very helpful focus as I read Joanna Godfrey Wood’s book, In Search of Hope. As an arts psychotherapist I believe that depression or an inner world of negative chatter can kill “hope.” Joanna, in a simple and engaging way, involves the reader in a series of vignettes and exercises to connect to meaningful and beautiful moments of being in the “flow” of hope. The book says that if we can only stop and listen mindfully beyond the busy-ness of our lives and our minds, within the stillness is the bigger picture of hope and positivity – and she gives us many tools to aid that experience. ~ Isa L. Levy, Quaker artist and arts psychotherapist
The unique way the author addresses the complex concept of hope means that the book begins with questions and ends with challenges. Looking at hope using personal stories means readers are allowed our own understandings and perspectives. In this way we can better understand Margaret Fell’s and the author’s own ideas about hope. The use of creativity, sometimes discouraged within Quakerism, is positively promoted here. So often a book will talk “at” us with its philosophy. This book suggests creative ways to find our hope, and ourselves. It asks us questions, encourages us to try things, observe things, to stop, to look, to listen. To live adventurously. ~ Clair Chapwell, writer and arts facilitator, member of Muswell Hill Meeting, North-West London Area Meeting, UK